Anxiety slows down doing math calculations in your head

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Oncewhite
"SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Worrying about how you'll perform on a math test may actually contribute to a lower test score, U.S. researchers said on Saturday.

Math anxiety -- feelings of dread and fear and avoiding math -- can sap the brain's limited amount of working capacity, a resource needed to compute difficult math problems, said Mark Ashcroft, a psychologist at the University of Nevada Los Vegas who studies the problem.

"It turns out that math anxiety occupies a person's working memory," said Ashcroft, who spoke on a panel at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science in San Francisco.

Ashcroft said while easy math tasks such as addition require only a small fraction of a person's working memory, harder computations require much more.

Worrying about math takes up a large chunk of a person's working memory stores as well, spelling disaster for the anxious student who is taking a high-stakes test.

Stress about how one does on tests like college entrance exams can make even good math students choke. "All of a sudden they start looking for the short cuts," said University of Chicago researcher Sian Beilock.

Although test preparation classes can help students overcome this anxiety, they are limited to students whose families can afford them.

Ultimately, she said, "It may not be wise to rely completely on scores to predict who will succeed."

While the causes of math anxiety are unknown, Ashcroft said people who manage to overcome math anxiety have completely normal math proficiency. "


http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20070219/od_nm/math_anxiety_dc

WrathfulDwarf
I can validate that story. Not in an academic sense but more in the work place area. I've notice that when co-workers are taking an inventory in our stock warehouse. They make more mistakes when there is pressure than when doing it in a normal pace. Most of them are good with math. But make these mistakes when they get pressure on them. That is why our foremans are asked to have them do the inventories at a much earlier time. To avoid any rushes.

Oncewhite
Originally posted by WrathfulDwarf
I can validate that story. Not in an academic sense but more in the work place area. I've notice that when co-workers are taking an inventory in our stock warehouse. They make more mistakes when there is pressure than when doing it in a normal pace. Most of them are good with math. But make these mistakes when they get pressure on them. That is why our foremans are asked to have them do the inventories at a much earlier time. To avoid any rushes.

well, we are human, with emotions (some of us are), computers don't have emotions and therefore, can take calculations until the battery runs down...why not just use computers to count the inventory (at least during rushes)?

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